Strunz v. Hood

87 P. 45, 44 Wash. 99, 1906 Wash. LEXIS 794
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1906
DocketNo. 6210
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 87 P. 45 (Strunz v. Hood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strunz v. Hood, 87 P. 45, 44 Wash. 99, 1906 Wash. LEXIS 794 (Wash. 1906).

Opinion

Crow, J.

This action was instituted by the plaintiffs Wenzel Strunz and Mary Strunz, his wife, under Bal. Code, §§ 5667, 5669 (P. C. §§ 3285, 3287), to reestablish certain lost corners and a lost boundary line between two sections of land- in Spokane county. The plaintiffs alleged that said line between sections 2 and 3 of township 26, north of range 45 E, W. M., had been lost and was uncertain; that plaintiffs are the owners of certain subdivisions constituting the fractional southwest quarter of section 2; that the defendant Joseph Sullivan is the owner of the northwest quarter of said section 2; that the defendants Hood and wife are the owners of lots 1, 4, 5 and 6, of section 3, being the only portion of said section which can be affected by said boundary line. The defendants Rebecca E. McCall. Joseph L. Rose, Nancy J. Rose, and the Pennsylvania Mortgage and Investment Company, who were alleged to be the owners of the east half of section 2, made default. The defendant James Sullivan was served by publication and defaulted for nonappearance. The defendants Hood and wife denied that said dividing line was lost or uncertain.

On October 4, 1904, a trial was had to determine whether said line had become lost and uncertain. Both parties con[102]*102ceded that the government corner post at the northeast corner of section 3 and the northwest corner of section 2 was in existence and could be accurately located. The evidenci disclosed that a portion of the southwest quarter of sectior 2, and the south and west line of that part of section 3 here involved were bounded by Lake Newman, a meander line having been run along said lake at said points by the Unitec States government surveyors. It further appeared that, when the original government survey was made, a meandei corner post had been established on the shore of said lake at the point where the line between sections 2 and 3 intersected said meander line, but that this monument had been lost. At the trial the plaintiffs produced numerous witnesses to show that this monument could not be found or located, while the defendants Hood and wife attempted to show that said corner had been located at the south end of a dividing line run in 1903 by one Stolzenberg, a surveyor employed jointly by plaintiffs and said defendants Hood and wife.

The trial court made findings of fact, from which it appears that said adjoining sections 2 and 3 both abut upon that body of water known as Newman Lake, which so cuts them as to cause the north and south dividing line between them to be less than one mile in length: that said sections were included in a survey made by the United .States government in August, 1880: that in said survey a corner posl was established at the northwest corner of section 2, being the northeast corner of section 3, and that the field notes of said survey also show that a quarter post was established on said line, forty chains south of said initial corner; that said field notes further show that a meander post was alsc fixed and established where said dividing line ran into said Newman Lake, and that said dividing line between said sections 2 and 3 connected said three posts and was and is th( dividing line between said two sections; that said quartei post and said meander corner post had both been lost anc [103]*103obliterated, and that their location cannot be ascertained; that the plaintiffs and said defendants Hood and wife cannot agree upon the location of said lost quarter post and meander corner post, and that one competent surveyor would be ample as a commissioner to establish said boundary. Upon said findings the court entered a preliminary order appointing Joseph M. Snow, a competent and practical surveyor, as a commissioner to survey, erect, establish, and properly mark the quarter corner post, and the meander corner post, on the dividing line between said sections.

On April 14, 1905, the commissioner made a written report, from which it appears that he did not succeed in find ing the original government quarter post or the original government meander post; that he did find the original gov ernment post at the northwest corner of section 2, and tb» northeast corner of section 3; that from this point he rao a random line in a southerly direction to the shore of Newman Lake; that having done so, he made a careful search along this random line for a distance of two hundred feet on each side, but that said search failed to show any trace or mark to indicate that the section line had ever been run or marked on the ground; that afterwards he ascertained the true course of the random line by a solar observation, and then established a true line running due south from said corner of sections 2 and 3, on the north boundary of the township; that at a point 2,640 feet south of said section corner, he established a quarter section corner between sections 2 and 3, and marked the same by setting a granite stone; that at a point 4,880 feet south of said corner of sections 2 and 3 and at a point twenty feet north of high water mark on the shore of Newman Lake, he established the meander corner and marked the same by setting a granite stone. The plaintiffs filed written exceptions to this report. On July 7, 1905, the defendant Sullivan moved the court to vacate the default entered against him, supporting his motion [104]*104by affidavits which appear in the record. Afterwards the report of the commissioner, the exceptions of the plaintiffs thereto, and the motion of the defendant Sullivan to vacate the default came on for hearing, at which time the trial court confirmed and approved the report of the commissioner and denied the motion to vacate said default. The plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial having been overruled, judgment was entered establishing the boundary line, the quarter section corner and the meander corner, as shown and fixed by said commissioner’s report. The plaintiffs Strunz and wife have appealed from said final judgment, and the defendant Sullivan has also appealed from said final judgment and from the order denying his motion to vacate said default.

The appellants Strunz and wife make numerous assignments of error involving the following conténtions: (1) Error of the trial court in refusing to admit additional evidence after the commissioner’s report had been made; (£) error in overruling appellants’ exceptions to said report; (3) error in denying appellants’ motion for a new trial; (4) error in taxing all costs against the appellants; and (5) error in establishing the boundary line as marked by said commissioner.

At the preliminary hearing, the appellants Strunz and wife earnestly endeavored to show that no monuments locating the quarter section corner or the meander corner could be found; also that the lines previously run by various surveyors, one of whom had been jointly employed by themselves and the respondents Hood, were incorrect. After the report of the commissioner had been filed, and the appellants Strunz and wife had interposed their exceptions, they asked permission to introduce further evidence for the purpose of showing that their exceptions were well taken, and that the locations of said original government quarter post and said original government meander corner post could be respectively found, ascertained and established at points about 170 [105]*105feet and 356.65 feet west of the points reported by Commissioner Snow, and they now contend that the trial court erred in refusing said offer. The evidence which appellants then tendered was afterwards specifically detailed in the affidavits presented in support of their motion for a new trial.

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Related

Jaggy v. Rooney
112 P. 367 (Washington Supreme Court, 1910)
Struntz v. Hood
107 P. 352 (Washington Supreme Court, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 P. 45, 44 Wash. 99, 1906 Wash. LEXIS 794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strunz-v-hood-wash-1906.